What's the difference between pulmonate and pulmonated?
Pulmonate
Definition:
(a.) Having breathing organs that act as lungs.
(a.) Pertaining to the Pulmonata.
(n.) One of the Pulmonata.
Example Sentences:
(1) The cercaria, microcercous in type, is liberated and actively penetrates a second terrestrial pulmonate where development to the free metacercarial stage takes place in the pericardial cavity.
(2) Two previously unnamed recesses within the serous pericardium are defined and named, one the inferior aortic recess of the transverse sinus and the other, the right pulmonic recess of the transverse sinus.
(3) Two days before death, the patient experienced complete heart block, and an echocardiogram revealed pulmonic valve thickening and an endocardial mass along the left side of the septum.
(4) The characteristic triangular face, stubby nose, peripheral pulmonic stenosis, a history of prolonged neonatal jaundice and evidence of hepatic parenchymal disease were present as well as bilateral small kidneys and delayed puberty.
(5) The RV ejection fractions were determined using thermodilution in two ways: (1) with incremental increases in pulmonic valve to thermistor distance, and (2) with incremental increases in injectate port to tricuspid valve.
(6) Valvar and valvar-subvalvar pulmonic outflow obstructions may be suggested by echocardiography.
(7) Using duplex sector scanners, velocity and blood flow have been obtained from the right and left ventricular chambers and aortic and pulmonic outflow tracts.
(8) Fifty-three underwent tricuspid valvulectomy without replacement and in addition two had pulmonic valve excision.
(9) Protosystolic dips in indicator concentration, noted in curves drawn below the pulmonic valve, suggest that the ventricle emptied sequentially.
(10) Changes in impedance through the large pulmonary arteries are are postulated to be responsible for the abnormal movement of the pulmonic valve during both phases of respiration.
(11) We studied 14 premature infants with the clinical diagnosis of peripheral pulmonic stenosis (PPS) and 15 normal full-term neonates by echocardiographic Doppler examinations.
(12) The morphology and electrophysiology of a newly identified bilateral pair of interneurones in the central nervous system of the pulmonate pond snail Lymnaea stagnalis is described.
(13) The uptake data, while preliminary, indicate that both the chemical species and their physical states are important in affecting alveolar permeation into the pulmonic lymph.
(14) Five patients had a severe form of tetralogy of Fallot; six had pulmonary atresia; five had transposition of the great vessels, ventricular septal defect (VSD), and pulmonic stenosis; five had truncus arteriosus; and one had "corrected" transposition, VSD, and pulmonic stenosis.
(15) Regurgitant fraction was also correlated with regurgitant area which was determined by preoperative area of the pulmonic annulus and width of the outflow patch.
(16) Spontaneously delayed ductal closure has been observed clinically and experimentally in newborns with critical pulmonic stenosis.
(17) An eight-year-old boy with supravalvular pulmonic stenosis, supravalvular aortic stenosis, and ventricular septal defect developed Staphylococcus aureus endocarditis.
(18) Percutaneous balloon valvuloplasty (BV) for pulmonic valve stenosis (PS) is increasingly becoming a nonsurgical alternative in patient management.
(19) Femoral insertion resulted in a greater distance from pulmonic valve to thermistor as compared with jugular placement (p = 0.005).
(20) Rare findings were a cor triatriatum, a tetralogy of Fallot, a partial defect of the pericardium, a pulmonic atresia with VSD, an isolated cleft of the tricuspid valve, and finally a connection of a hepatic vein to the right atrium.
Pulmonated
Definition:
(a.) same as Pulmonate (a).
Example Sentences:
(1) The cercaria, microcercous in type, is liberated and actively penetrates a second terrestrial pulmonate where development to the free metacercarial stage takes place in the pericardial cavity.
(2) Two previously unnamed recesses within the serous pericardium are defined and named, one the inferior aortic recess of the transverse sinus and the other, the right pulmonic recess of the transverse sinus.
(3) Two days before death, the patient experienced complete heart block, and an echocardiogram revealed pulmonic valve thickening and an endocardial mass along the left side of the septum.
(4) The characteristic triangular face, stubby nose, peripheral pulmonic stenosis, a history of prolonged neonatal jaundice and evidence of hepatic parenchymal disease were present as well as bilateral small kidneys and delayed puberty.
(5) The RV ejection fractions were determined using thermodilution in two ways: (1) with incremental increases in pulmonic valve to thermistor distance, and (2) with incremental increases in injectate port to tricuspid valve.
(6) Valvar and valvar-subvalvar pulmonic outflow obstructions may be suggested by echocardiography.
(7) Using duplex sector scanners, velocity and blood flow have been obtained from the right and left ventricular chambers and aortic and pulmonic outflow tracts.
(8) Fifty-three underwent tricuspid valvulectomy without replacement and in addition two had pulmonic valve excision.
(9) Protosystolic dips in indicator concentration, noted in curves drawn below the pulmonic valve, suggest that the ventricle emptied sequentially.
(10) Changes in impedance through the large pulmonary arteries are are postulated to be responsible for the abnormal movement of the pulmonic valve during both phases of respiration.
(11) We studied 14 premature infants with the clinical diagnosis of peripheral pulmonic stenosis (PPS) and 15 normal full-term neonates by echocardiographic Doppler examinations.
(12) The morphology and electrophysiology of a newly identified bilateral pair of interneurones in the central nervous system of the pulmonate pond snail Lymnaea stagnalis is described.
(13) The uptake data, while preliminary, indicate that both the chemical species and their physical states are important in affecting alveolar permeation into the pulmonic lymph.
(14) Five patients had a severe form of tetralogy of Fallot; six had pulmonary atresia; five had transposition of the great vessels, ventricular septal defect (VSD), and pulmonic stenosis; five had truncus arteriosus; and one had "corrected" transposition, VSD, and pulmonic stenosis.
(15) Regurgitant fraction was also correlated with regurgitant area which was determined by preoperative area of the pulmonic annulus and width of the outflow patch.
(16) Spontaneously delayed ductal closure has been observed clinically and experimentally in newborns with critical pulmonic stenosis.
(17) An eight-year-old boy with supravalvular pulmonic stenosis, supravalvular aortic stenosis, and ventricular septal defect developed Staphylococcus aureus endocarditis.
(18) Percutaneous balloon valvuloplasty (BV) for pulmonic valve stenosis (PS) is increasingly becoming a nonsurgical alternative in patient management.
(19) Femoral insertion resulted in a greater distance from pulmonic valve to thermistor as compared with jugular placement (p = 0.005).
(20) Rare findings were a cor triatriatum, a tetralogy of Fallot, a partial defect of the pericardium, a pulmonic atresia with VSD, an isolated cleft of the tricuspid valve, and finally a connection of a hepatic vein to the right atrium.